
Brownell
Seasons Change – And So Did I
I love the lyric in this song. Seasons change and so do I. Thanks, Guess Who. (Song below).
Aspen got snow the other day, and the town cheered. While other cities (Atlanta in particular) gasp at a snowflake (unless they're a kid getting out of school), Aspen cheers.
Years ago I was in a speaker traning class and I gave a talk about the benefits of a skiing vacation. One included the fact that any precipitation is good. Pretty day? Great! Get out and enjoy it! Precipitation? Great! That means the snow on the mountain will be soft and fluffy.
That's the way we should all try to look at life. Flip a coin and be happy with either heads or tails.
Oh, and yesterday I rejoiced at the 63 degree sunny day. Yes, while also admiring the snow on the mountaintop.
And while we're on the subject of the Guess Who…
Back in the Saddle Again
I've been off for a few days – traveling to Taos and Santa Fe, with a few stops along the way. In this post, I'll talk about how happy I am to be back in Aspen.
It snowed while I was gone. Here's the view from my place. Snow in the fall. Beautiful, isn't it?
It's extraordinary to call a place I've only lived for a little over 100 days "home." But it feels that way.
I've always known I'm more of a "looking forward" person vs. someone who looks back. When I invented the DrawSuccess game and became an expert in personality types, I finally "got" myself. How I see the world.
According to research, roughly 15% of people think like I do. The rest either live "in the moment" or are more focused on history and the past. My "type" is
So while I was traveling, I was enjoying the experience. Yet I was also looking forward to coming back. To coming home.
I'm glad I got to see Taos and Santa Fe. Both beautiful places. Just not a place I would enjoy as much as Aspen.
Trip Review Part 2
This photo was taken at The Great Sand Dunes National Park.
From a distance it looks like a lighter, lower mountain range in the distance. But up close it's mind-blowing. 132.8 square miles of sand.
This is me in the distance. (Great picture, right? )
The history of the dunes is fascinating. Check out the Wikipedia page. This apparently fragile environment, created 440,000 years ago, is actually growing/increasing every year.
We didn't spend much time there, but it's definitely worth going back to visit again, especially to see how far I can walk and walk and walk through the 40-50 foot and higher dunes that go on for quite a distance.
Another fun aspect of Southern Central Colorado is the signs for UFOs all over the place. Here's an example.
And, finally, once in Santa Fe we went to a lot of shops and galleries. My favorite were the kinetic sculptures.
Enjoy!
Trip Review – Part 1
This post is a review of my trip to Taos and Santa Fe.
We left early Wednesday morning – before daybreak – in order to capture the sunrise on Independence Pass – the highest point on the Continental Divde as you leave Aspen. Breathtaking, isn't it? The Pass will only be open for another few weeks, until it closes for the winter.
This song encapuslates the feeling:
On The Road Again
I'm taking my first road trip since moving here (not counting a few trips to Glenwood Springs or Basalt).
As the image suggests, I'm going to Taos and Santa Fe, New Mexico. Places I've never been before. But I've certainly heard – and read – a lot about it. I've read several of the Stuart Woods books, many of which are set in Santa Fe.
As a voracious reader, I often feel like I've been someplace I've read about. I even sometimes do online searches for places the author mentions. And I'm not the only one. I've heard about the tours in different cities based on novels (if not television shows).
As an author myself, I love imagining places as I write. Especially worlds like The Old West and the Ottoman Empire. While I could not have been there (at least in this lifetime), I do try to do some research to add authenticity.
But there's nothing like travel – real travel – to spur the writer's imagination.
More later!
No Makeup
This is the time of year when Aspen strips down its colors. The trees colors have changed from verdant green to vibrant yellows and reds to drier colors of brown. But still beautiful. In fact, in some ways more. Like a woman's face washed clean from make-up, you see the basic beauty, the bone structure, the blank canvas.
While on the subject of makeup, one of the other things I love about it here is the way women have no pressure or expectation to wear it. Which was, honestly, a surprise. I also expected to see more "dressing up." More displays of wealth or status or enhanced appearance. Gratefully, that's far from the case. I went to the Aspen Film Festival last week expecting to see people decked out, but it was as casual as can be. Although I might not be able to distinguish a pair of $20 jeans from $2000 jeans, I'm soooo happy it wouldn't matter!
That being said, I fully expect some "competition" when ski season is in full swing. Not for makeup, but for the "best" technology in clothing or equipment. "My coat keeps me warmer" or "my gloves keep my fingers toasty" will come up for sure. "My sunglasses make it easier to see the shades in the sun" or "my skis/boots are so much easier to maneuver." Will see…
On a slightly side note, I heard today that Demi Lovato posts selfies without makeup once a week. Good for her! Love it!
One Step Forward
Today was the first day I've gone for a walk since my heart procedure.
Concerned I would put too much stress on my heart, I took it slow. Like really, really slow. For a walk that would have taken me an hour, it took nearly two. That's how slow.
What a different perspective you have when you slow down!
I admired berries on bushes, leaves floating down a crystal-clear creek, and so much more. Yes, I was passed by a number of people. So what? I was so proud that I could do what I did!
And here's the most obvious song for this post. Enjoy – and slow down sometime. It feels groovy.
May the Forest Be With You
When my friends came to visit a few weeks ago, one of them mentioned that he heard (or felt) a "hum" in Aspen. Some kind of vibration.
Wow.
A week or so later I went to an IONS meeting here. IONS is the Institute for Noetic Science. Here's the "Who We Are" message from the IONS website:
The Institute of Noetic Sciences is a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting individual and collective transformation through consciousness research, transformative learning, and engaging a global community in the realization of our human potential.
The leader of the group posed the question, "Why is it there are so many aware, enlightened people in the Valley?"
A few minutes later someone was talking about the energy emitted by metals. I raised my hand and said, "Perhaps the fact that Aspen used to be a silver mining town affects the energy."
Or it could just be the beauty. The intelligence. The environmental consciousness. The weather. The clean air. The number and variety of charitable causes. The… fill-in-the-blank.
And because I just couldn't resist…
Shadows and Light
The expression "can't see the forest for the trees" is a common one, indicating someone who's unable to get the big picture because he/she's too focused on the details.
So what is the metaphor for appreciating the shadows more than (or at least as much as) the trees?
Do you ever do this? Look down at the path or sidewalk or road and see the patterns of light and dark reflected on them?
I honestly can't say I've ever done that until I moved here.
So the next questions are – Why me? Why now? Why this?
Again, I think this is why the "universe" likes it when you make big changes in your life. Apparently, making changes – even small ones – is beneficial to your brain, too. Breaking routine, even something as simple as taking another route to work, keeps you alert. And according to some research, can also help you prevent Alzheimer's.
You don't have to move. You can just change your perspective.
But moving helps.
I absolutely love the message conveyed by the lyrics in this song. Take a listen. The proverbial "making lemonade from lemons" theme… Beautiful.
And because… well you get it:
When September Ends
This song is especially poignant. While the video (below) also has it's own message, it actually doesn't fit the song's original meaning. I'm not sure why they changed it for the video. Perhaps it was still to "raw" a memory.
The song actually was was written by frontman Billie Joe Armstrong regarding the death of his father.
The meaning is especially profound to me, not only because yes, this is the end of the month, but also because eight years ago my father had the stroke that eventually killed him on September 30.
I also relate to the lyrics here because of the emotion generated by the thought of sleeping away time. I had one particular time in my life when I wanted to "fast-forward" my life. To get past the pain. To have already endured the obstacles I saw before me.
I believe I've talked about Fred Alan Wolf's "The Yoga of Time Travel" before – one of my favorite books – that talks about the perception of time and how to alter it.
Einstein's view on time established that it is, indeed an illusion. There is no time in the universe. The best explanation my minimalist brain can conjure is the way we can go to sleep and slip into a dream that fits an entire movie into a minute or less.
Just as life can change in a split second.
Wake me up. When September Ends.